DAYTON, OR - On the 50th
anniversary of one of the most-famous UFO sightings in history, townsfolk
don't seem to understand what the fuss is all about.

They don't understand why experts have worked for decades
to debunk the photos taken from Paul and Evelyn Trent's back yard on May
11, 1950.

They don't have conversations at the town's single bar
about whether there is life beyond Earth.

They say they're not interested in an alien-themed ball
and UFO watch that McMenamins Hotel Oregon is throwing in McMinnville to
commemorate the event.

A month passed before the Trents gained their notoriety,
in part because the couple waited to finish the roll of film that contained
two of the most hotly debated UFO photographs ever, the closest ever taken
of an unidentified flying object and one of the first captured on film.

A June 10, 1950, story in The Oregonian reports that
Evelyn Trent was outside feeding the rabbits on the family farm near Dayton,
about 11 miles south of McMinnville, when she saw a strange metallic object
in the sky. She yelled for her husband, who grabbed a camera and ran outside.

The Trents told The Oregonian that the saucer came from
the northeast at about 7:45 p.m., changed direction, then slipped out of
sight. "It was like a good-sized parachute canopy without the strings,
only silvery bright mixed with bronze," she said at the time. "It
was as pretty as anything I ever saw."

When a friend saw the pictures, he hung them in his bank
window, where they drew the eye of a McMinnville reporter. From there,
the photos traveled worldwide across the news wires. Life magazine featured
them in its June 26, 1950, edition.

Kim Trent Spencer, the farm couple's granddaughter, says
she remembers talking about the UFO pictures when she was young, but back
then she didn't know the details -- that her grandmother said she had seen
UFOs before, that the object created a breeze that blew through her grandparents'
hair, or which relative spotted the saucer first.

"We think about it every once in a while,"
she said. "It stays in the back of your mind. I just remember they
had a lot of problems with people not believing them. They'd come out and
hang up hubcaps and take pictures to see if that's how they did it."

Both of Spencer's grandparents died a couple of years
ago.

Dave Sanguinetti, special events coordinator for the
Hotel Oregon, said he's not surprised about the lack of interest in Dayton.

"It's not a real popular subject around town,"
he said. "You never know -- it could have happened. The whole area
is a mecca for sightings. Seems like everyone has a UFO sighting story."

To celebrate, McMenamins is bringing in Bruce Maccabee,
the UFOlogist who investigated the photos.

"We're taking it seriously to a point because Bruce
Maccabee is going to be here," Sanguinetti said. "But we're also
taking it campily. There will be green Martians. I think it's going to
be great. I think it's going to be insane."

In a recently updated report to the Center for UFO Studies
in Chicago, Maccabee said he was unable to prove the photos were a hoax
because the image is so clear. He came to a similar conclusion to that
of photo analyst William Hartmann, who determined that the way the light
was distributed on the photo shows it was a distant object, not a hubcap
hung on a telephone wire.

In an Air Force investigation of the UFO reports at the
University of Colorado in 1967 -- known as the Condon Report -- Hartmann
determined that the evidence was "consistent with the assertion that
an extraordinary flying object, silvery, metallic, disk-shaped, tens of
meters in diameter and evidently artificial, flew within sight of two witnesses."

Hartmann, a senior scientist at the Tucson Planetary
Science Institute, said his ideas about the analysis changed when he learned
the Trents said they had seen other UFOs. "In my mind this reduced
their credibility as follows: If their photo is real, it is clearly an
artificial object and apparently not terrestrial, i.e. an alien spacecraft.
But such objects must be extremely rare, or we'd have better documentation
by now."

Some Dayton inhabitants may not be excited about the
50th anniversary of the event, but they do say it happened. They've seen
similar things themselves. A 1996 Newsweek poll showed that 48 percent
of Americans think the government is hiding proof of UFOs from the public.

Howard Putman, owner of Putt's Store in Dayton, said
he and several other teen-agers saw several spaceships in the late 1940s.

"We were out working a field at U.S. Alderman Farms
near Independence, hoeing corn or potatoes, and we saw five saucers swing
down, corner off, then disappear," he said. "A little later,
some military planes came over, and that's all we know. We can't prove
it or disprove it. You know, there were a lot of things going on in the
war years, so it could have been anything."

But Putman, like many Dayton residents, hasn't joined
the UFO debate.

"They say it's a regular occurrence around here,"
he said. "The Trents could've seen something. It's not a big deal,
though. If they're out there, they're out there." _____

Fifty years ago, the most important event in human history
happened in McMinnville when a local farm couple captured evidence of interplanetary
visitors on film.

Or they merely snapped a couple of pictures of a still-secret
military craft. Or maybe it was an optical illusion, or a hoax.

Even after 50 years, nobody yet knows what to make of
the two photographs taken by Paul and Evelyn Trent a bit after dinner on
May 11, 1950. Much has been made of the photographs, nonetheless.

What set the Trents' photographs apart wasn't the timing.
They weren't the first photos purporting to show unidentified flying objects,
and they've hardly been the last.

"There have been a lot of such events, but this
was of particular interest because of the clarity of the photos,"
said Bruce Maccabee, a researcher who has performed an exhaustive analysis.
"Without the photos, it would have been just another sighting by some
people, but the Trent case stands out because these photos are so clear
that it's either the real thing or a hoax."

Unlikely hoaxers

Beyond the relative clarity of the photos, though, it
was the Trents themselves who really set the photos apart.

Both Paul and Evelyn Trent died in the late 1990s. The
house where the photographs were taken has long since been torn down.

But the Trents were, by all accounts, simple farm folk.
They weren't the sort of people likely to either imagine or make up a flying
saucer story, said Maccabee, who spent hours interviewing them over several
years while he studied the photographs.

"I basically concluded that they were not the type
of people who would attempt a UFO hoax, to say the nothing of pulling one
off," he said.

That conclusion was echoed by journalist Bill Powell,
who showed the Trent photographs to the world and touched off a media circus
decades before that term came into common use.

Working for the Telephone-Register, predecessor of the
News-Register, Powell got word of the photos in June 1950. They had been
snapped a month earlier.

There were two of them. Retrieving the negatives from
Paul Trent, Powell published them across the top of the Telephone-Register
and told the Trents' story.

Evelyn Trent had been feeding rabbits in the backyard
of their Ballston-area farm when she saw a flying disc in the sky to the
northwest. She called for her husband, Paul, who snapped a photograph with
his Kodak camera, rewound the film as rapidly as possible, and snapped
a second shot 30 seconds later.

Both photos appear to show a disc zipping through the
sky.

Paul Trent may have had photos of the biggest news story
ever to hit McMinnville, but all he did was put the camera away. Later,
after finishing off the roll of film on Mother's Day, he took it to a drug
store on McMinnville's Third Street to be developed.

"The reason I thought they were authentic was that
the negatives were in the middle of the roll," said Powell from his
retirement home in Idaho Falls, Idaho. "He'd taken some more pictures
so that he'd make sure he got his money's worth when he developed the things."

Maccabee said that story is part of why the photographs
have taken on such importance in the UFO movement. If the Trents had been
trying to fake a photograph, they'd likely have taken several practice
shots and shown the world only the best of what they ended up with.

The other thing that makes the photos believable is that
the Trents didn't seem to be trying to take advantage of them.

The day Paul Trent got the film developed, he told banker
Ralph Wortman about it. Wortman mentioned it to Telephone-Register Editor
Phil Bladine, who dispatched Powell to investigate.

Photos go national

Once the photos were published, however, they touched
a national nerve.

Several supposed UFO sightings, usually called flying
saucers then, had recently made the news. The photos went out on the wires
and were reprinted across the nation.

Life, then the nation's top circulation magazine, published
them in July.

Mutual Broadcasting System radio personality Frank Edwards
obtained a copy of the Telephone-Register and called Bladine.

"Your paper is 10 cents," Edwards said to Bladine.
"Can I tell people that if they send you a dime, you'll send 'em a
copy?"

"I said 'sure', figuring that we might get a request
for three or four papers," Bladine recalled.

Instead, requests flooded in. Dimes came taped to cards
and wrapped in paper.

Sometimes payment was made in stamps. Sometimes dollar
bills were sent and multiple copies were requested.

The Telephone Register's headline the next week reported,
"Saucers Top Story in U.S. Inquiries Flood TR office."

At the time, the paper's circulation was less than 4,000,
Bladine guesses. But by the end of week, requests for an extra 2,000 copies
had come in.

That led to a special reprinting of the front page on
high quality paper. By late summer, most of a special press run of 10,000
copies had been mailed out to people in all 48 states, the District of
Columbia and Canada.

Bladine said many of the people contacting the paper
had stories to tell. "People said that they'd seen a flying saucer,
but didn't want to tell anyone because they were afraid they'd be thought
nuts."

The Trents were eventually invited to New York for a
radio appearance.

The photos have been reprinted many times since. They
were included in the Condon Report, a University of Colorado study conducted
into UFO sightings on behalf of the U.S. Air Force.

Before Life published the photographs, they were cropped
by someone. Nothing but the cropped versions have been published since,
said Tim Hills, a McMenamins historian who researched the photos as part
of a look at the area's history when the pub chain reopened Hotel Oregon
in McMinnville.

"The Telephone Register is the only source of the
full-frame photos," he said. "They were never published full-frame
ever again."

Skeptics abound

UFO skeptics have challenged the photos' authenticity,
saying the story the Trents told of how the photos came to be taken was
inconsistent. Maccabee, who interviewed the Trents many times, said he
didn't find the inconsistencies significant.

"If they had said exactly the same thing every time,
they (skeptics) would have said it was a hoax because they'd memorized
it," he said. "You can't win with that one."

Other critics have said the shadows in the pictures indicate
the photos were taken in the morning, rather than evening as the Trents
said, but no one has come up with an explanation for why they'd lie about
an insignificant element like that.

Hills finds the Trents and their story credible, even
after the variations of multiple tellings.